Last month, the ITC issued a Notice of ALJ David P. Shaw’s Final Initial Determination on Violation in In the Matter of Certain Audiovisual Components and Products Containing the Same (Inv. No. 337-TA-837), the investigation into LSI/Agere’s allegations that Realtek and Funai infringed 802.11-essential and H.264-essential patents (as well as one non-SEP). The ITC found that Funai infringed the non-essential patent at issue, but that none of the Respondents infringed the the SEPs at issue in the case. Yesterday, the ITC issued the public versions of both the ALJ’s Initial Determination and the ALJ’s Recommended Determination on Remedy and Bonding.

The ALJ addressed three different types of SEP-related issues in his ID: (1) LSI/Agere’s infringement allegations based on the standards at issue; (2) the Respondents’ RAND-related defenses; and (3) the Respondents duty of disclosure-related defenses.

Infringement

As to the standard-based infringement allegations, the ALJ found these to be insufficient, at least for the alleged H.264-essential patent — he concluded that the H.264 Reference Software that is provided by the ITU is merely “an aid to assist in the implementation” of the accused functionality, but does not prove that the Respondents actually implemented the functionality in the same way as the standard. For the two 802.11-essential patents, LSI/Agere’s infringement allegations appear to be based both on the standard and code implemented by the accused products, so this same issue wasn’t present there.

RAND Defenses

Beginning on page 333 of the Initial Determination, ALJ Shaw extensively addressed LSI/Agere’s RAND obligations and the litany of Respondents’ RAND-related defenses (breach of contract, waiver, patent misuse, equitable estoppel, unclean hands, etc.). In total, he spends over eighteen pages reciting the RAND-relevant facts. (However, of course, much of the specific numbers and information regarding the parties’ license negotiations has been redacted). He notes that both LSI/Agere and all Respondents agree that the alleged SEPs at issue are in fact SEPs and are subject to RAND obligations (an issue that has been disputed in other cases, like the Samsung-Apple and InterDigital ITC investigations).

Ultimately, ALJ Shaw determined that the Respondents did not carry their burden of proof on any of the RAND-related defenses. He found that the Respondents’ RAND-related defenses are based on LSI/Agere’s opening offer, and explained that he could find “no authority for the argument that a patent holder must make an initial offer for a specific fair and reasonable royalty rate.” While the Respondents had compared LSI/Agere’s offered rate to the RAND royalty rates set by Judge Robart in Microsoft-Motorola, ALJ Shaw explained that Judge Robart’s order “did not necessarily set RAND royalty rates for the IEEE and ITU” — rather, that order was based on the specific patents and factual situation in that case. ALJ Shaw also repeatedly cited the complexity inherent in RAND license negotiations, and appeared to fault the Respondents for not offering evidence showing which terms actually would constitute a RAND license. (Again, much of this portion is redacted, unfortunately).

Finally, ALJ Shaw addressed the preliminary injunction entered by Judge Whyte of the Northern District of California that — due to a finding of a RAND breach — purports to prevent LSI and Agere from enforcing any ITC-related exclusionary relief against Realtek based on infringement of the 802.11-essential patents. He found that the facts presented in the ITC investigation appeared to differ from those presented to the district court, specifically with respect to a licensing offer having been made to Realtek (the RAND breach was found mainly due to a finding that LSI/Agere filed the ITC complaint before making any license offer to Realtek). ALJ Shaw also explained that based on his evaluation of the facts, the failure of the parties to conclude a RAND license agreement cannot be attributed to LSI/Agere.

Lastly, ALJ Shaw noted that “there is no indication at this time that the Commission, as a matter of law, has determined to treat RAND obligations as contractual obligations” that must be satisfied before exclusion orders may issue. (Keep in mind that the confidential version of this order actually issued on July 18, before the USTR’s veto of the Samsung-Apple exclusion order). In any event, he determined that the Respondents did not present evidence to define basic contractual elements (such as the parties, offer, acceptance, consideration) — let alone the elements of a contractual defense that extended to third parties.

Duty of Disclosure

The Respondents argued that the prior owner of the 802.11-essential patents, Lucent, (as well as the inventors) failed to disclose these patents and their applications to the IEEE, breaching a duty of disclosure — and that these patents are therefore unenforceable (under the doctrines of implied waiver / equitable estoppel). LSI/Agere claim that there was no duty of disclosure under the IEEE patent policy, and because both Lucent and LSI submitted RAND letters of assurance, the IEEE patent policy was fully complied with.

Although he notably did not address the issue of whether the IEEE’s patent policy actually required disclosure of patents and pending patent applications, the ALJ concluded that these defenses failed for other reasons. First — in contrast to his acknowledgement of the parties’ agreement regarding essentiality for RAND issues — he noted that the Respondents’ non-infringement arguments undercut their arguments that the patent was “actually essential” and that a duty of disclosure should therefore apply. Second, he found that the RAND obligations entered into by LSI/Agere and Lucent mitigated any “patent hold-up” concerns that might be associated with a failure to disclose. Lastly, he found that there was no reliance on the “silence” (the non-disclosure of the patents), which is an essential element of these defenses.

Recommended Determination on Remedy and Bonding

As we saw in the RD issued in the recent InterDigital ITC case, the ALJ here recommended that, in the event the Commission were to reverse his infringement findings on the asserted SEPs, an exclusion order and cease and desist order should issue. In doing so, the ALJ made an interesting (and potentially controversial) comment about the value of the SEPs at issue:

If the Commission determines that the asserted ‘958, ‘867, and ‘663 patents [the alleged SEPs] are infringed and essential patents that are required for downstream products to perform the functions of the 802.11 IEEE Wi-Fi standard or the H.264 ITU-T standard, respectively, then they would be of great value. (emphasis added)

Some may argue that this value cited by the ALJ is the “hold-up” value, or the value conferred on the patents simply by their inclusion in the standard — as opposed to their actual technological value.

As for RAND issues, they did not play a role in the remedial portion of the RD, as the ALJ noted that because public interest issues were not delegated to him, this would need to fall within the purview of the Commission on any potential review. But RAND did come into play in the recommended amount of bond that the Respondents would need to post to be allowed to import infringing products during the 60-day Presidential Review period (if a violation is ultimately found). Because the standards at issue here (802.11 and H.264) were the same as in the Microsoft-Motorola case, the Respondents argued that the appropriate bond should not exceed the “RAND ranges” determined by Judge Robart — 0.555 – 16.389 cents/unit for 802.11, and 0.8 – 19.5 cents/unit for H.264. The Respondents also argued that existing LSI/Agere license agreements were evidence of an upper bound of the bond. Although the ultimate bond amount is redacted, it appears to be a percentage amount of the value of the allegedly-infringing products that accounted for these factors.

This case will now proceed to briefing on the parties’ petitions for review, which has actually already begun. The target date for the Commission to issue its Final Determination is November 18. 2013.

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David W. Long founded Essential Patent LLC (http://essentialpatent.net) to focus on patent law and related hi-tech intellectual property issues, including standard essential patents, licensing negotiations, mediation and other legal services. David has over twenty-five years of telecommunications experience, including over twenty years litigating complex patent cases in federal district and appellate courts. Read More

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The Essential Patent LLC intellectual property law firm welcomes you to the Essential Patent Blog! This blog was started in response to increased interest and litigation surrounding standard-essential patents (SEPs). Historically, most SEP issues were relegated to theoretical discussions in academic literature or conference presentations. But that’s changing.